Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom Lit 43U i IUIQ Dorm food Cloudy, light snow expected. High in the upper 30s. i "VoI. XCV, No. 137 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, March 24, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eiaht Paaes _.y.. , ..yon Little siblings visit campus By KAREN KLEIN Yesterday morning in the West Quad cafeteria, freshman Michigan basketball player Steve Stoyko dunked four-year- old Mike Bassford into the garbage can and put him on the conveyor belt used for dirty dishes. "It's rare," Stoyko said, "to see a little four-year-old kid hanging around the college." ON ANY other weekend four-year-olds would have been out of place. But this weekend the campus became home to the little sisters and brothers of University students during the Li'l Sibs Weekend, sponsored by the Student Alumni Council and Residence Hall Association. And Stoyko and others 0seemed to enjoy the visitors. "This is our most successful year ever," said SAC'advisor Chris Oldenburg with a grin. "We finally had to cut off registration." The $2 registration fee covered the cost of the weekend's events and entitled the siblings to a booklet of coupons from local merchants. SAC and RHA had scheduled conflictingsibling weekend in past years, but for this third annual sibs' weekend Mary Woronoff, a pharmacy student and director of the weekend,. said the two groups worked together to plan the event-filled weekend. 1 AT THE MAGIC show in the Alumni Center yesterday, the room was filled with little siblings sporting Michigan shirts and hats and eating M&Ms and popcorn. Ten year old Dawn Sherr, who won the Friday night ice cream eating contest, was at the magic show Saturday after- noon. "Its' good and funny," Dawn said of the show with its broken magic wand, shrinking Michael Jackson gloves, and giant playing cards. Despite the drizzle and cold weather, the little sibs made their own magic in tours of the campus. "I like the Grad best," said 11-year-old Mark Waschewski af- 0 ter surveying the libraries. AT THE exhibit museum, 12-year-old Steven Farr examined the displays and concluded that "Dinosaurs are great." One of the more popular sights was the newly-renovated basement of the Michigan Union, where several of the siblings were intrigued by the new video game center. While 11-year-old Pete McDaniel played a karate game on a video screen, six-year-old Madhu Katta studied another type of vi- leo. "I like MTV," Katta said. "My best song is Girls Just Wanna See STUDENTS, Page 3 Northwestern bags state title By BRAD MORGAN The fans at Crisler Arena knew it, the booster club knew it, Detroit Southwestern coach Perry Watson knew it, and, most importantly, the Flint Northwestern players and coach Grover Kirkland knew it. The Wildcats are awesome. RANKED number one all season and owner of a Class A record 46 straight victories, North- western proved yesterday that it is one of the best teams ever to play the game in Michigan by dismantling a game Southwestern club, 69-55, to win its second straight Class A championship. Led by Mr. Basketball Glen Rice's 25 points and nine rebounds and Anthony Pendleton's 20 points on nine-of-ten shooting, Northwestern went through the motions for much of the game and still won easily. Unanswered spurts of 10,11 and 16 points stretched Flint's lead to 26 points midway through the third quarter. Only their lackadaisacal play allowed Southwestern to narrow the score to the final margin. It's hard to compare, but certainly no team has been any better than they are," said an ad- miring Watson. "They're an awesome team, but we had no fear of them. "WE FELT we could cause more problems if it were a running game, if it were, an all-out pressing game by them, but in the second half they just sagged back in their zone and took away some open lanes we might have had if they had pressed." Kirkland said that his club's regional match- up with Flint Central was good preparation for Southwestern. "I thought this game was planned since Cen- tral in that they had good outside shooters and Southwestern also had good outside shooters," said the Wildcats' head man. "We shut their guards off in the first quarter with our man-to-man and the game was over in the second quarter." IN THAT second stanza, Northwestern ran off 16 straight points to break open a close game and pull out to a 37-16 lead. Pendleton had six of the 16 while Rice added four. Southwestern cut the lead to 43-27 right after halftime but the Wildcats again pulled away. A spinning reverse layup by Pendleton and a Daryl Miller slam off an offensive rebound highlighted a ten-point run that buried the Prospectors for good. Sam Sillman and Terence Wheeler had 14 poin- ts apiece to lead Southwestern. But the Prospec- tors could convert only 39 per cent of their shots (23-59), while Northwestern was a sizzling 61 per cent from the floor (28-46). High school tournament coverage continues on Page 7. AFTER THE game Kirkland wasn't shy about praising his team. "This was a better team than last year's club because we had more speed," he said. "I feel that this probably is the best team ever to play in the State of Michigan. Rice, who averaged 28 points and 12.5 reboun- ds per game this year showed early in the cham- pionship clash why he was named the state's best player and why he was the key to the Wildcats' greatness. He scored 11 points first quarter and also pulled down four of his rebounds in that period. The 6-7 senior added three assists and one blocked shot while helping his club, control the tempo of the game. RICE HAS yet to commit to a college for next year but said he has narrowed it down to six choices, one of which is Michigan. And although he is the undisputed star on this stellar team, Rice best summed up North- western's winning formula. "We thought we could go undefeated. We just pray a lot and we work together well as A team." Rich was being modest. They work awesomely as a team. Daily Photo by BRAD MILLS The Prospectors of Southwestern can only watch helpless as Flint North- western's Daryl Miller throws down a dunk at Crisler Arena yesterday. The jam was typical of the way Northwestern treated their smaller opponents en route to capturing the state's Class A championship. .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .e.....-.....a.......*......,,......,..._______________.a__ . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . Arkansas teachers show up for exams From AP and UPI LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - A threatened boycott of state-mandated teacher testing fizzled yesterday, as an over- whelming majority of Arkansas' public school teachers and ad- ministrators took the nation's first basic skills exam required for recer- tification. Like the pupils they instruct, thousands of teachers hunched over school desks yesterday, No. 2-lead pen. cils in hand, as they took a first-in-the- nation basic skills test to determine whether they may keep their jobs. SOME STAYED away, risking disciplinary action or dismisal, but early reports from the 276 test sites across the state indicated a boycott was fizzling. The Arkansas Education Association, a 17,50)-member.teacher organization which called the test humiliating, promised to defend boycotters in court, although it denied encouraging a boycott. "The impact of the boycott was very light, if there was a boycott at all," Tommy Venters, director of the Arkan- sas Education Department's general See TEACHERS, Page 3 y: v ':... .. ...... ..... ... .; " I":"'nv.. 'Regent Smith sympathizes with career women WomenR wo e n protest sexist bill1board By NANCY DRISCOLL Chanting '"Objects never, women forever" and carrying signs reading "Stop sexist advertising against women," about 25 people yesterday protested in front of a billboard on Nor- th Main Street that advertises Canadian Black Velvet whiskey. The protest, which lasted about two hours, was sponsdred by Women Rebelling in a Sexist Environment (RISE). Their goal was to draw atten- tion to the billboard which they said is sexist. "THAT SIGN is dangerous. It's propaganda. People get used to it. They get anesthetized," said Pat Willacher, a city resident and former University student. She said the advertisement "is just using women's bodies to sell their product." The billboard, which shows a woman in a low-cut black velvet dress lying in front of a bottle of Canadian Velvet, reads "feel the Velvet." MEMBERS OF the group said their protest was an effective way of dealing with the billboard. "It draws attention. It makes people think. (Sexist advertising) is so per- vasive in our society that you don't con- sciously realize it as oppression and this focuses our attention on it," said Michelle Kramer, a city resident. Amos Kornfeld, one of two men protesting the billboard, said that he has known about the billboard for four years. He said he happened to be walking by the billboard yesterday and See WOMEN, Page 3 r:z~ it By ERIC MATTSON As. someone who ran her own business in the 1950s, University Regent Veronica Smith knows how tough it can be for women trying to get ahead in a world dominated by men. I Smith, one of three women on the Board of Regents, says she sym- pathizes with the uphill climb women Profile face even today to get to get ahead in business and politics. "I CAN RELATE to the women," the Republican from Grosse Ile says. "When you stop and think about it, about half the students on campus are women. Then you look at the ad- ministration and you look at the faculty. "I happened to look around at the board meeting, and aside from the three women regents, there was no other woman there," she says. "That kind of bothers me." Smith, 60, graduated from the University in 1948 with a degree in sociology. In 1950, she took over her brother's insurance business and had to contend with the stereotypes and prejudices toward women. Sitting comfortably on a sofa, looking matronly in a bright pink blouse tied with a big white bow, she recalls one time when her firm put in the-low bid for a county sheriff's contract. The company, that had the account before her wrote to the state insurance com- mision'er demanding to see all her rates and licenses. "I got a registered letter in the mail saying either you do this or we'll take away your license. They would never have thought to do that to a man. Never," she says. Fortunately, Smith was able to sub- stantiate all the bids and get the con- tract. Still, the incident bothered her. "It was unbelievable to me," she says. BUT despite her experiences, Smith. is not one to advocate special treatment for women. Just like her parents did, she encourages women to use education as a way to get ahead. When she was growing up in Wyan- dotte, Mich., Smith says, her parents encouraged her to get an education and be prepared to start a career of her own. "In our particular household, education was stressed. The fact that you were female made no difference. You were to prepare yourself for a profession or for some means of being able to take care of yourself, because I was not brought up to get married," she says. SMITH'S parents encouragement of her education was somewhat unusual in Wyandotte. In fact, of all her friends who enrolled in college preparatory See REGENT, Page 2 Daily Photo by DARRIAN SMITH Protesters boycott a billboard in front of a Main Street party store. TODAY- SWAK BOUT 200 students at Brockport High School in Brockport, N.Y. walked out of classes Friday to protest a ban on necking that school officials im- posed last week. Some students said they were less upset by the ban than with the severity of the punish- yesterday. Two girls on the bus said, 'We're going to protest, we're going to walk out.' Another kid took them seriously;and it sort of grew," he said. Gums IT'S BEEN nothing but "soup and hard-boiled eggs" for Herbert Epp since his dentist repossessed his false teeth three weeks ago. Now Epp, 68, says he won't drop his willing to return the teeth. Hess said he would talk with Epp before deciding whether to accept the offer. But even if the teeth are back in Epp's mouth, it won't take the bite out of Epp's lawsuit, Hess said. "Absolutely not," he said, ad- ding that he plans to pursue the monetary damages portion of the action. "I've been living on soup and hard-boiled eggs," Epp said of his three weeks without teeth. "I have to dunk my toast in my coffee." "The whole thing is fault with - one for Campbell Soup's Prego Spaghetti Sauce in which she shouts: "I found it. I really found it." Mrs. Peller said yesterday, "Wendy's is worried about the beef in Prego. . . . Well, there's plenty of beef in this world for everyone. . . They have no beef as far as I can see." At a news conference, she noted she does not say the word beef in the spaghetti sauce ad. "All I said was, 'I found it,' " she explained. "I could have found a million dollars." Wendy's I I I II